senate, Jasmine Crockett, texas, threat

Rep. Jasmine Crockett Weighs Possible Texas Senate Run, But Focus Remains On Redistricting Fight

'What many don’t know is that we are Texas tough,” she said. 'So what that means is that we are ready to fight back!'


Rep. Jasmine Crockett, the North Texas Democratic firebrand, hinted in a recent interview with KHOU-11 that that she would consider a run for U.S. Senate if data support she could be competitive in a statewide Senate race.

“The fact that I represent 1/38th of the state, it is daunting to think that I could be competitive statewide. But if I could, only representing 1/38th of the state and having never run statewide before, it’s something I’d have to take a long, hard look at,” Crockett said.

Despite this ambition, her attention and focus remains squarely focused on the redistricting fight her Democratic colleagues in Texas are engaging in with Gov. Greg Abbott and the Texas Republicans in the House who are determined to do the bidding of President Donald Trump and help him pick up five additional seats in the House of Representatives.

“I don’t know how many people I’ve come across, whether it’s been in real life or via social media, that have said ‘I didn’t realize Texas was a majority-minority state. I didn’t realize that this is what gerrymandering looked like.’ The fact that there’s at least one state that is already saying, ‘if y’all want to play this game, we will match your energy.’ That is fantastic,” she told the outlet.

According to The Dallas Morning News Crockett has stayed in Texas in order to rally support for the quorum break by holding rallies.

During one such rally at Oak Cliff’s Antioch Fellowship Missionary Baptist Church, she indicated that the Texas Democrats were not going to roll over.

“What many don’t know is that we are Texas tough,” she told the crowd. “So what that means is that we are ready to fight back!”

After the rally, she spoke to the Dallas Morning News.

“I travel the country all the time, doing my best to make sure that we’re injecting energy all throughout this country. It’s time for me to make sure that I’m doing the hard work on the ground in Texas. Some people may not care when they know that the whole point was the Republicans wanted to kick me out of my district, They may say, ‘No we’re keeping our congresswoman even though you don’t want her to be mine.’”

Though the Texas Democrats are expected to return to their home state on Aug. 18, the action by California Gov. Gavin Newsom to present a “trigger map,” that is, a redistricting map favoring Democrats, that is set to go into effect only if Texas Republicans vote to create a Republican friendly election map, provided some relief for the Democrats from Texas who broke quorum.

On Aug. 16, Congressman Greg Casar, an Austin Democrat, praised the Democrats who left at a rally held at the Texas Capitol building.

“If Trump and Abbott had their way, they would’ve passed these maps weeks ago,” Casar told the crowd. “Trump doesn’t have a plan to win the election, he has a plan to rig the election.”

RELATED CONTENT: Black People Driving Texas Growth. Redistricting Will Stop Representation, PAC Leader Says

Colin Kaepernick, Know Your Rights Camp Autopsy Initiative, Independent Autopsy, Trey Reed

ESPN Pulls Spike Lee’s Colin Kaepernick Documentary, Citing ‘Creative Differences’

The docuseries was supposed to detail Kaepernick's journey of taking a knee during the national anthem at NFL games.


The story of football player Colin Kaepernick taking a knee for racial justice will not be seen on ESPN.

While ESPN Films had produced the docuseries of the NFL quarterback turned social justice advocate, the Spike Lee joint will no longer premiere on the sports network due to “creative difference.”

ESPN confirmed the news to Reuters in an Aug. 16 statement.

The docuseries began production in 2022, with the promise of delivering a “full, first-person account” of Kaepernick’s story as well as interviews from fellow NFL players. While the docuseries’ level of completion remains unknown, ESPN did disclose the project was not “reaching finality.”

Kaepernick became a polarizing figure when be began taking a knee during the national anthem at NFL games to protest systemic racism and police brutality in 2016. The docuseries was supposed to detail the now 37-year-old’s decision as well as subsequent backlash and support.

Lee also remained mum on the feature’s unfortunate update as he signed a non-disclosure agreement. A day before the formal announcement of the docuseries’ scrapping, Lee told the news outlet of its shelving while on the red carpet for a fundraising event.

The canceled release comes amid prior reports by Puck of production delays. The center of the drama reportedly happened between Lee and Kaepernick over the series’ direction.

Kaepernick was the quarterback of the San Francisco 49ers from 2011 to 2016 but suffered a huge blow in his football career over alleged blackballing stemming from his public political stances. He settled with the NFL in 2019 over the collusion allegations. He has not played for another team since leaving the 49ers.

Although the docuseries no longer has a home on ESPN, additional reports say the network’s chairman would allow the film to be released elsewhere.

RELATED CONTENT: Colin Kaepernick’s Team Addresses “False Narratives”

judge, Atlanta, guilty

Atlanta Judge Says Man Is Guilty Before Correcting Himself

Alton Olive was actually found not guilty on all six charges by a jury.


An Atlanta judge mistakenly announced the wrong verdict, leaving the courtroom in shock as he corrected himself in the viral incident.

Judge Henry Newkirk was presiding over a high-profile trial of Alton Oliver, who was charged in the 2022 fatal shooting of a sheriff’s deputy in Fulton County. The judge initially said Oliver was guilty on all six counts surrounding the shooting, murder and aggravated assault.

Court reporter Meghann Cuniff shared the footage of the ordeal.

“We, the jury, find the defendant guilty as to all six counts of the indictment,” said Newkirk.

As the Atlanta judge revealed the wrong verdict, the court erupted into confused shouts of “what.” He immediately took back his words, as the jury actually acquitted Oliver of all the charges.

He apologized for what he deemed as a “mispronunciation.” The crowd started to clap, but bailiffs reminded the court attendees to remain silent.

The 26-year-old had testified that he shot James Thomas Jr. in self-defense. According to Fox 5, Oliver revealed that he shot at Thomas Jr. at their third encounter after the officer kept propositioning him for sex.

The jury deliberated for nine hours. Oliver had no prior criminal history before the incident. Oliver’s legal team became emotional after hearing of the acquittal, with the man thanking the women on his bench.

“We asked you to interact with other people that you don’t know and make some pretty tough calls. This case falls in that category—pretty tough call,” Newkirk said.

RELATED CONTENT: Sean Kingston Asks For House Arrest Ahead Of Sentencing

Edward P. McCabe

New Biography Illuminates Edward P. McCabe, The Visionary Politician Who Dreamed Of An All-Black State In Oklahoma

The biography, by Caleb Gayle, explores the life of Edward P. McCabe, a man nearly erased from history.


If you’ve never heard of Edward P. McCabe, there’s likely a good reason. Even though he is among the first Black Americans to be elected to political office and one of three Black founders of the town of Langston, Oklahoma, as well the HBCU that bears the town’s name, Langston University, McCabe was also considered something of a pariah, even in his day.

According to Caleb Gayle, the author of a recently released biography about McCabe, Black Moses: A Saga of Ambition and the Fight for a Black State, McCabe’s effort to establish a Black state in Oklahoma is a cautionary tale of utilizing colonization to benefit Black people.

“The reason I was so interested in him wasn’t because he was perfect, but because he was deeply flawed. His rationale was deeply flawed and you could see from the start that he was going to fail,” Gayle told Northeastern University in July. “As Black leaders talking to Black people in a predominantly Black state, that’s what he wanted to do, but in so doing, he was exacting the same experiences of colonization on his own people. They were actively trying to colonize Oklahoma, but on behalf of Black people.”

To that end, McCabe petitioned then-president of the United States Benjamin Harrison, a fellow Republican, to allow him to provide a solution to “the Negro problem” by appointing him the governor of the Oklahoma Territory. Harrison turned him down.

McCabe, undeterred, traveled to Oklahoma in 1890, and found an area in a state of flux as it tended to attract poor white immigrants and was the home of indigenous peoples who had been driven off their ancestral lands.

McCabe’s idealistic, yet flawed approach stemmed from his association with the now forgotten “Exodusters” movement, principally concerned with helping newly freed formerly enslaved people living in the South escape the region.

He may have learned the wrong lessons in trying to use capitalism to obtain liberation, and as Gayle notes in his account, the work of colonization cannot simply be turned on other colonized people who have been similarly crushed underneath the heel of the American empire because one feels that the country owes your people a debt.

Actually, the empire owes both Black people and Native Americans a debt, a bill of reparations it can never fully repay.

As Gayle notes in the book, “Salvation was collective, because it was for a coherent group: Black people in the South. It was terrestrial because they planned to find salvation in the real land of Kansas. As Reconstruction collapsed, Black people had to act—and quickly.”

Unfortunately for McCabe and his compatriots, in 1891, Harrison and the GOP allowed white settlers to make a run on the land in Oklahoma, which led to McCabe recognizing that his “hope in the Republican Party was evaporating. His frustration over the misalignment between his desired pace of progress and that of his white Republican colleagues had been simmering in the background.”

In the end, McCabe’s death in poverty and relative obscurity in 1920 dovetails with the 1921 Tulsa Race Massacre, but the explosive destruction of Black Wall Street at the hands of whites in Tulsa (with the assistance of the American government) illustrates the paradox at the root of McCabe’s effort to create a Black state: even if Black people were given latitude to create their own table, white people would just invent a fantasy, a pretext to destroy the house it sits in.

So far, Gayle’s biography has received rave reviews, according to book review aggregation site Book Marks. Per Adam Goudsouzia’s review for The Washington Post, the success of Gayle’s biography lies in the questions it forces the reader to ask themselves.

RELATED CONTENT: Students Request ‘Angel Of Greenwood’ After Tulsa Massacre Book Rejected, Receive Free Copies From Author

The 1st BLACK ENTERPRISE Cover Birthed A 55-Year Legacy

The 1st BLACK ENTERPRISE Cover Birthed A 55-Year Legacy

Founder and Publisher Earl G. Graves, Sr. launched a publication and gave birth to a media company.


In August 1970, the visionary Founder and Publisher Earl G. Graves, Sr. launched a publication and gave birth to a media company that to this day has enabled generations of African Americans to achieve “wealth for life” through building thriving businesses, gaining mobility in corporate America, and embracing sound money management and disciplined investing. As a result, it has been a source of inspiration and guidance for African Americans to become full participants in the economic mainstream as captains of industry, executives of immeasurable influence, and multigenerational wealth builders.

Charles Evers, the late mayor of Fayette, Mississippi, served as the magazine’s first cover subject and embodied Black entrepreneurs who emerged from the Civil Rights Movement and demonstrated the qualities required to be successful: Business savvy, political muscle, and boundless determination.

A member of BLACK ENTERPRISE‘s first advisory board, he developed and operated the profitable Medgar Evers Shopping Center, named in honor of his brother, the prominent civil rights leader slain by an assassin’s bullet in 1963.

RELATED CONTENT: Happy Birthday, Mr. G!: Remembering The Legacy Of BLACK ENTERPRISE Founder Earl Graves, Sr.

Doechii,scam, juneteenth festival

Doechii And SiR Booking Scam Leaves Promoter $187K Short For Baltimore Juneteenth Concert

An Atlanta event company claims a booking agent pocketed nearly $200,000 by fabricating deals to secure TDE artists Doechii and SiR for Baltimore’s AFRAM Festival.


An Atlanta event company is suing a booking agent it accuses of faking deals with major artists, taking nearly $200,000 in the process. Blackout Management LLC claims New Jersey talent booker Christopher Young pocketed a $187,500 deposit after promising to secure Doechii and SiR as headliners for Baltimore’s AFRAM Festival — then falsely claimed the artists dropped out.

According to a lawsuit filed Aug. 13, Young, operating through his company Sacrifice Management, told Blackout’s owner, Nicola Blandon, that his ties to Top Dawg Entertainment (TDE) gave him direct access to the performers. The complaint says Young proposed booking both artists for the June 2025 festival and confirmed the deal once the money was wired in December 2024.

By March, Young reportedly claimed that Doechii and SiR had “pulled out” due to scheduling issues. But no contracts or official paperwork were ever provided. When Blackout reached out to TDE directly, the company says it learned the entire booking was fabricated.

“TDE’s representative confirmed that defendant Young had been lying for months,” the lawsuit states. “Young never spoke to anyone at TDE about securing Doechii’s performance and had, at most, preliminary conversations about SiR.”

The suit alleges Young refused to return the $187,500 deposit despite repeated settlement attempts. Blackout is suing Young and Sacrifice Management for fraud, negligent misrepresentation, unjust enrichment, and other claims, asking for repayment with interest, attorney’s fees, and punitive damages.

“This put Blackout in a precarious situation,” the lawsuit says. “With the festival fast approaching, Blackout no longer had headliners. And one of the main supporting acts — who had agreed to perform at a discount to be billed under Doechii — now had to be paid a higher fee. Making matters worse, Young had damaged Blackout’s relationship and credibility with TDE.”

AFRAM, Baltimore’s official Juneteenth celebration, draws more than 150,000 attendees per day and is one of the city’s largest cultural events. Blackout says the alleged scheme not only cost them money but also jeopardized the festival’s reputation.

RELATED CONTENT: ‘Anxiety’ Rapper Doechii Launches Her Own Mental Health Resource Hub For Fans To Get Support

report, Blackness

Black Freedom Fund Launches $200M Endowment To Support Black Communities

Executive Director Marc Philpart says the fund aims to provide $10 million in annual grants as political pressure mounts over race-conscious philanthropy.


The California Black Freedom Fund, launched in 2020 amid nationwide calls for racial justice after the murder of George Floyd, is taking a bold step to secure its future. The organization has announced plans to build a $200 million endowment, a move that is both unusual in philanthropy and politically charged, as the Trump administration intensifies scrutiny of race-based grantmaking.

Originally part of the Silicon Valley Community Foundation, the fund became an independent nonprofit on July 1 under a new name — the Black Freedom Fund — signaling its expanded national mission. In just five years, it has raised more than $97 million and directed $45 million in grants to 206 California-based nonprofits serving Black communities.

According to the Associated Press, the organization supports groups working on criminal justice reform, youth programs, civic engagement, and economic development, emphasizing long-term power-building rather than short-term charity.

Executive Director Marc Philpart said the endowment would allow the fund to distribute $10 million annually without diminishing its core assets.

“When a crisis occurs in the Black community, philanthropy parachutes in, there’s a wave of support, and then as soon as the news cameras turn away, the support recedes,” Philpart said. “We need enduring institutions that are led by and committed to the Black community in ways that have a lasting impact.”

The move comes at a time when federal officials are challenging diversity, equity, and inclusion efforts. The Department of Justice has been directed to investigate race-conscious programs, while a 2023 Supreme Court ruling against race-based college admissions has added uncertainty for foundations and nonprofits.

Dan Morenoff, executive director of the American Civil Rights Project, warned that the administration is “fervently looking for people to make examples of at this point.”

Despite the political pressure, Philpart said donor interest has grown. “People have rallied to us and really doubled down on their commitments to support Black freedom and Black power,” he said. “That is the most telling thing coming out of this moment — that there is a critical mass of leaders throughout the country who care very deeply about the community.”

The California Wellness Foundation is among those maintaining support. President Richard Tate called the fund “needed now more than ever,” adding, “The fact that we are talking about a Black Freedom Fund is an acknowledgment that not everyone has equal standing in the culture. Whatever headwinds that may exist because of this political moment, now is the time for us to continue to be explicit about our intentions of supporting a community.”

Nonprofits led by Black people historically receive smaller endowments — just a quarter the size of those led by white executives, according to a 2022 analysis by the Bridgespan Group. That disparity underscores why the Black Freedom Fund views its endowment as a critical tool to ensure stability and independence. Philpart remains confident the fund can meet its ambitious goal. “We’re drawing people out who want to prove we are greater than divisiveness, we are greater than bigotry, and we are greater than racism,” he said.

RELATED CONTENT: Black Lives Matter Global Network Foundation Responds To Lil Yachty Saying, ‘BLM Is A Scam’

LaToya Cantrell, New Orleans Mayor

New Orleans Mayor LaToya Cantrell Becomes City’s First Mayor Federally Indicted In Office

Cantrell was once celebrated as the city's first Black female mayor.


On Aug. 15, New Orleans Mayor LaToya Cantrell made unwanted history as the first sitting mayor in the city’s 300-year existence to face criminal charges while in office. Federal prosecutors accuse her of conspiring for years to hide an affair with her bodyguard and have charged her with conspiracy, fraud, and obstruction.

According to CNN, Cantrell, who is slated to leave office in about five months due to term limits, was once celebrated as the city’s first Black female mayor, but is now being held out by federal prosecutors as the latest example of corruption in New Orleans.

“Public corruption has crippled us for years and years,” Acting U.S. Attorney Michael Simpson said in a statement alluding to the city’s history of public officials accused of corruption. “And this is extremely significant.”

Cantrell’s alleged paramour, Jeffery Vappie, has himself been charged with wire fraud and making false statements, charges to which he has pleaded not guilty.

Although the pair has maintained that their relationship was strictly professional, the indictment portrays the two as having constructed a “personal and intimate” relationship, using WhatsApp to communicate undetected and then deleting the messages later.

According to Simpson, Vappie and Cantrell used the messaging platform to exchange more than 15,000 messages including attempts to harass a citizen, delete evidence, make false statements to FBI agents, “and ultimately to commit perjury before a federal grand jury.”

Vappie and Cantrell are accused of spending $70,000 in taxpayer money to facilitate Vappie’s various rendezvous with the mayor, which Simpson alleges were looked upon fondly by Cantrell per WhatsApp messages, including one from September 2022 that read “The times when we are truly (traveling) is what spoils me the most.”

Despite the allegations against her, Cantrell and her political allies have contended that the allegations against her are, at least in part, due to her gender and race, an assertion that Simpson bristled at in his comments.

“It’s irrelevant that it’s romance or that it’s female,” Simpson told reporters, continuing that it stands as “an incredible betrayal of people’s confidence in their own government.”

Cantrell, a Democratic mayor, has struggled to hold onto power during her second term, narrowly surviving a recall vote in 2022 amid infighting with city council members.

According to WDSU, several notable individuals responded to the indictment of Cantrell, including the City of New Orleans and several members of the New Orleans City Council.

“The City of New Orleans is aware of today’s indictment against Mayor Cantrell. The Mayor’s attorney, Eddie Castaing, recently received the information, and is thoroughly reviewing the document. Until his review is complete, the City will not comment further on this matter,” the City of New Orleans said in a statement.

“Everyone is presumed innocent under the law. Mayor Cantrell deserves that presumption. This, unfortunately, will be sensationalized because it involves the Mayor and will further impede the City’s operations. We should, however, let the facts play out and not rush to judgment,” New Orleans City Councilman Joe Giarusso said.

“The announcement today reminds us of the need to let the justice system work in a fair, timely fashion and without regard to politics or preference. I’m praying for Mayor Cantrell, her family, and all New Orleanians. These are critical times for our city to get back on track and to stay focused on building a city that works and thrives for everyone. Let us all hope for a swift resolution to the situation that will bring justice. We must unify as a city and focus on the challenges we face together,” New Orleans City Councilman Oliver Thomas stated.

RELATED CONTENT: New Orleans Mayor Sued For Continuous Trash Dispute In Famous French Quarter Neighborhood

Dr. Bernice King, Martin Luther King, charlie kirk

Bernice King Honors Father’s Legacy At Cincinnati’s Black Family Reunion

Speaking before a packed crowd in Cincinnati, Dr. Bernice King called on communities to confront injustice with courage and compassion, while rejecting long-standing myths about her father’s assassination.


The Black Family Reunion is once again energizing Cincinnati this weekend, nearly 40 years after its founding, with a slate of events honoring family, history, and community. On Aug. 14, Dr. Bernice King, daughter of Martin Luther King Jr., addressed a packed audience at Corinthian Baptist Church in Bond Hill. She spoke about the enduring lessons of the civil rights movement and its relevance today.

“Because that’s what happened in the ’60s,” King said, as reported by WLWT. “Y’all saw action. But there was an invisible force walking and moving those people, because they had a certain heart posture. And they weren’t trying to destroy the people who were trying to destroy them.”

The discussion, moderated by WLWT News 5’s Courtis Fuller, also touched on how to confront injustice without losing sight of shared humanity.

Earlier that day, King participated in the groundbreaking of a new memorial in Cincinnati to honor her father at the intersection of Reading Road and Martin Luther King Jr. Drive.

The monument, commissioned by the city earlier this year to replace an older memorial dating back to 1987, is expected to be completed early next year. Mayor Aftab Pureval and City Manager Sheryl Long were among those attending the ceremony.

Reflecting on her father’s assassination in 1968, King said her family has never believed the widely accepted narrative. “Not just killed and murdered, but assassinated. A lot of forces worked to get my father out of here. And I’ll let you all keep believing it was James Earl Ray, but the family knows it was not James Earl Ray,” she said.

The Black Family Reunion, officially launched in Cincinnati in 1988 by Dr. Dorothy I. Height, President Emerita of the National Council of Negro Women, was created to celebrate and strengthen African American families while pushing back against damaging stereotypes. The event, known nationally as the Midwest Regional Black Family Reunion Celebration, has fostered connection and unity for generations.

This year’s celebration, running through Aug. 17, continues to highlight that mission, offering gatherings and programming designed to honor Black family life, history, and culture.

RELATED CONTENT: Martin Luther King Jr.’s Daughter Claps Back At Donald Trump For Comparing Himself To Her Father

Sean Kingston

Sean Kingston Sentenced To 3.5 Years In Prison For $1M Luxury Fraud Scheme

Kingston and his mother, Janice Eleanor Turner, were convicted of conspiracy to commit wire fraud and four counts of wire fraud.


Singer Sean Kingston has been sentenced to three and a half years in federal prison for his role in a $1 million fraud scheme in which prosecutors say he used his fame to secure luxury goods without paying for them.

Kingston, born Kisean Paul Anderson, and his mother, Janice Eleanor Turner, were convicted in March of conspiracy to commit wire fraud and four counts of wire fraud. Turner received a five-year prison sentence last month.

Prosecutors said the mother and son tricked high-end businesses into delivering jewelry, luxury beds, exotic cars, and a microLED TV by promising payment through fraudulent wire transfers, then kept the merchandise. The scheme stretched over several years before indictments were issued in 2024.

“He [Kingston] clearly doesn’t like to pay and relies on his celebrity status to defraud his victims,” Assistant U.S. Attorney Marc Anton said Friday, calling Kingston’s actions “a yearslong pattern” of bullying sellers into handing over expensive items.

Anton continued, “He is a thief and a conman, plain and simple.”

Kingston was first arrested in May after a SWAT raid at his Florida home and was confined to house arrest with electronic monitoring following his conviction. His mother, Turner, was taken into federal custody immediately.

Defense attorney Zeljka Bozanic argued that Kingston, now 35, has the “mentality of a teenager” — the age he was when his 2007 hit “Beautiful Girls” made him an overnight star. “No one showed him how to invest his money,” Bozanic said. “Money went in and money went out on superficial things.”

Bozanic told the court Kingston has begun repaying victims and plans to reimburse the full amount once released.

Kingston, who has released three studio albums since his breakout success, rose to international fame at just 17 years old when his song “Beautiful Girls” hit No. 1 on the Billboard Hot 100.

RELATED CONTENT: Sean Kingston Asks For House Arrest Ahead Of Sentencing

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